LORD SLYNN OF HADLEY
My Lords,
The respondent to this appeal is alleged to have committed or
to have been responsible for the commission of the most serious of crimes--genocide,
murder on a large scale, torture, the taking of hostages. In the course of 1998, eleven
criminal suits have been brought against him in Chile in respect of such crimes.
Proceedings have also now been brought in a Spanish court. The Spanish Court has, however,
held that it has jurisdiction to try him. In the latter proceedings, none of these
specific crimes is said to have been committed by the respondent himself.
If the question for your Lordships on the appeal were whether
these allegations should be investigated by a Criminal Court in Chile or by an
international tribunal, the answer, subject to the terms of any amnesty, would surely be
yes. But that is not the question and it is necessary to remind oneself throughout that it
is not the question. Your Lordships are not being asked to decide whether proceedings
should be brought against the respondent, even whether he should in the end be extradited
to another country (that is a question for the Secretary of State) let alone whether he in
particular is guilty of the commission or responsible for the commission of these crimes.
The sole question is whether he is entitled to immunity as a former Head of State from
arrest and extradition proceedings in the United Kingdom in respect of acts alleged to
have been committed whilst he was Head of State.
The Proceedings
The proceedings have arisen in this way. On 16 October 1998 Mr.
Nicholas Evans, a Metropolitan Magistrate, issued a provisional warrant for the arrest of
the respondent pursuant to section 8(1)(b) of the Extradition Act 1989 on the basis
that there was evidence that he was accused that:
- "between 11 September 1973 and 31 December 1983 within the jurisdiction of
the Fifth Central Magistrate of the National Court of Madrid did murder Spanish citizens
in Chile within the jurisdiction of the Government of Spain."
A second warrant was issued by Mr. Ronald Bartle, a
Metropolitan Magistrate, on 22 October 1998 on the application of the Spanish Government,
but without the respondent being heard, despite a written request that he should be heard
to oppose the application. That warrant was issued on the basis that there was evidence
that he was accused:
- "between 1 January 1988 and December 1992 being a public official
intentionally inflicted severe pain or suffering on another in the performance or
purported performance of his official duties within the jurisdiction of the Government of
Spain."
Particulars of other alleged offences were set out, namely:
(i) between 1 January 1988 and 31 December 1992, being a
public official, conspired with persons unknown to intentionally inflict severe pain or
suffering on another in the performance or purported performance of his official duties;
(ii) Between 1 January 1982 and 31 January 1992: (a) he
detained; (b) he conspired with persons unknown to detain other persons ("the
hostages") and in order to compel such persons to do or to abstain from doing any
act, threatened to kill, injure or continue to detain the hostages;
(iii) Between January 1976 and December 1992, conspired
together with persons unknown to commit murder in a Convention country.
It seems, however, that there are alleged at present to have been only one or two cases
of torture between 1 January 1988 and 11 March 1990.
The respondent was arrested on that warrant on 23 October.
On the same day as the second warrant was issued, and following
an application to the Home Secretary to cancel the warrant pursuant to section 8(4) of the
Extradition Act 1989, solicitors for the respondent issued a summons applying for an order
of Habeas Corpus. Mr. Michael Caplan, a partner in the firm of solicitors, deposed that
the plaintiff was in hospital under medication following major surgery and that he claimed
privilege and immunity from arrest on two grounds. The first was that, as stated by the
Ambassador of Chile to the Court of St. James's, the respondent was "President of the
Government Junta of Chile" according to Decree No. 1, dated 11 September 1973 from 11
September 1973 until 26 June 1974 and "Head of State of the Republic of Chile"
from 26 June 1974 until 11 March 1990 pursuant to Decree Law No. 527, dated 26 June 1974,
confirmed by Decree Law No. 806, dated 17 December 1974, and subsequently by the 14th
Transitory Provision of the Political Constitution of the Republic of Chile 1980. The
second ground was that the respondent was not and had not been a subject of Spain and
accordingly no extradition crime had been identified.
An application was also made on 22 October for leave to apply
for judicial review to quash the first warrant of 16 October and to direct the Home
Secretary to cancel the warrant. On 26 October a further application was made for Habeas
Corpus and judicial review of the second warrant. The grounds put forward were (in
addition to the claim for immunity up to 1990) that all the charges specified offences
contrary to English statutory provisions which were not in force when the acts were done.
As to the fifth charge of murder in a Convention country, it was objected that this
charged murder in Chile (not a Convention country) by someone not a Spanish national or a
national of a Convention country. Objection was also taken to the issue of a second
provisional warrant when the first was treated as being valid.
These applications were heard by the Divisional Court on 26 and
27 October. On 28 October leave was given to the respondent to move for certiorari and the
decision to issue the provisional warrant of 16 October was quashed. The Magistrate's
decision of 22 October to issue a provisional warrant was also quashed, but the quashing
of the second warrant was stayed pending an appeal to your Lordships' House for which
leave was given on an undertaking that the Commissioner of Police and the Government of
Spain would lodge a petition to the House on 2 November 1998. It was ordered that the
applicant was not to be released from custody other than on bail, which was granted
subsequently. No order was made on the application for Habeas Corpus, save to grant leave
to appeal and as to costs.
The Divisional Court certified:
- "that a point of law of general public importance is involved in the Court's
decision, namely the proper interpretation and scope of the immunity enjoyed by a former
Head of State from arrest and extradition proceedings in the United Kingdom in respect of
acts committed when he was Head of State".
The matter first came before your Lordships on Wednesday 5
November. Application for leave to intervene was made first by Amnesty International and
others representing victims of the alleged activities. Conditional leave was given to
these intervenors, subject to the parties showing cause why they should not be heard. It
was ordered that submissions should so far as possible be in writing, but that, in view of
the very short time available before the hearing, exceptionally leave was given to
supplement those by oral submissions, subject to time limits to be fixed. At the hearing
no objection was raised to Professor Brownlie, Q.C. on behalf of these intervenors being
heard. Leave was also given to other intervenors to apply to put in written submissions,
although an application to make oral submissions was refused. Written submissions were
received on behalf of these parties. Because of the urgency and the important and
difficult questions of international law which appeared to be raised, the Attorney
General, at your Lordships request, instructed Mr. David Lloyd-Jones as amicus curiae and
their Lordships are greatly indebted to him for the assistance he provided in writing and
orally at such very short notice. Many cases have been cited by counsel, but I only refer
to a small number of them.
At the date of the provisional warrants and of the judgment of
the Divisional Court no extradition request had been made by Spain, a party to the
European Convention on Extradition, nor accordingly any authority to proceed from the
Secretary of State under the Extradition Act 1989.
The Divisional Court held that the first warrant was defective.
The offence specified of murder in Chile was clearly not said to be committed in Spain so
that section 2(1)(a) of the 1989 Act was not satisfied. Nor was section 2(1)(b)
of the Act satisfied since the United Kingdom Courts could only try a defendant for murder
outside the United Kingdom if the defendant was a British citizen (section 9 of the
Offences Against the Person Act 1861 as amended). Moreover, section 2(3)(a) was not
satisfied, since the accused is not a citizen of Spain and it is not sufficient that the
victim was a citizen of Spain. The Home Secretary, however, was held not to have been in
breach of his duty by not cancelling the warrants. As for the second provisional warrant,
the Divisional Court rejected the respondent's argument that it was unlawful to proceed on
the second warrant and that the Magistrate erred in not holding an inter partes hearing.
The Court did not rule at that stage on the respondent's argument that the acts alleged
did not constitute crimes in the United Kingdom at the time they were done, but added that
it was not necessary that the conduct alleged did constitute a crime here at the time the
alleged crime was committed abroad.
As to the sovereign immunity claim, the Court found that from
the earliest date in the second warrant (January 1976), the respondent was Head of State
of Chile and, although he ceased to be Head of State in March 1990, nothing was relied on
as having taken place after March 1990 and indeed the second international warrant issued
by the Spanish Judge covered the period from September 1973 to 1979. Section 20 in Part
III of the State Immunity Act 1978 was held to apply to matters which occurred before the
coming into force of the Act. The Court read the international warrant as accusing the
respondent not of personally torturing or murdering victims or causing their
disappearance, but of using the powers of the State of which he was Head to do that. They
rejected the argument that section 20(1) of the 1970 Act and Article 39 of the Vienna
Convention only applied to acts done in the United Kingdom, and held that the applicant
was entitled to immunity as a former Head of State from the criminal and civil process of
the English Courts.
A request for the extradition of the respondent, signed in
Madrid on 3 November 1998 by the same judge who signed the international warrant, set out
a large number of alleged murders, disappearances and cases of torture which, it is said,
were in breach of Spanish law relating to genocide, to torture and to terrorism. They
occurred mainly in Chile, but there are others outside Chile--e.g. an attempt to murder in
Madrid, which was abandoned because of the danger to the agent concerned. The respondent
personally is said to have met an agent of the intelligence services of Chile (D.I.N.A.)
following an attack in Rome on the Vice-President of Chile in October 1975 and to have set
up and directed "Operation Condor" to eliminate political adversaries,
particularly in South America.
- "These offences have presumably been committed, by Augusto Pinochet Ugarte,
along with others in accordance with the plan previously established and designed for the
systematic elimination of the political opponents, specific segments of sections of the
Chilean national groups, ethnic and religious groups, in order to remove any ideological
dispute and purify the Chilean way of life through the disappearance and death of the most
prominent leaders and other elements which defended Socialist, Communist (Marxist)
positions, or who simply disagreed."
By order of 5 November 1998, the Judges of the National Court
Criminal Division in Plenary Session held that Spain had jurisdiction to try crimes of
terrorism, and genocide even committed abroad, including crimes of torture which are an
aspect of genocide and not merely in respect of Spanish victims.
- "Spain is competent to judge the events by virtue of the principle of
universal prosecution for certain crimes--a category of international law--established by
our internal legislation. It also has a legitimate interest in the exercise of such
jurisdiction because more than 50 nationals were killed or disappeared in Chile, victims
of the repression reported in the proceedings."
The Validity of the Arrest
Although before the Divisional Court the case was argued on the
basis that the respondent was at the relevant times Head of State, it was suggested that
he was not entitled to such recognition, at any rate for the whole of the period during
which the crimes were alleged to have been committed and for which immunity is claimed. An
affidavit sworn on 2 November 1974 was produced from Professor Faundez to support this.
His view was that by Decree Law No. 1 of 11 September 1973, the respondent was only made
President of the Military Junta; that Decree Law was in any event unconstitutional. By
Decree Law No. 527 of 26 June 1974, the respondent was designated "Supreme Chief of
the Nation" and by Decree Law No. 806 of 17 December 1974, he was given the title
President of the Republic of Chile. This, too, it is said was unconstitutional, as was the
Decree Law No. 788 of 4 December 1974 purporting to reconcile the Decree Laws with the
Constitution. He was not, in any event, appointed in a way recognised by the Constitution.
It seems clear, however, that the respondent acted as Head of State. In affidavits from
the Ambassador of Chile to the Court of St. James's, sworn on 21 October 1998, and by
affidavits of two former Ambassadors, his position has been said to be that of President
of the Junta from 11 September 1973 until 26 June 1974 and then Head of State from 26 June
1974 until 11 March 1990. Moreover, it was the respondent who signed the letters of
credential presented to The Queen by the Chilean Ambassador to the United Kingdom on 26
October 1973. Further, in the request for extradition dated 3 November 1998, the Spanish
Government speak of him as being Head of State. He is said not to have immunity "in
regard to the allegedly criminal acts committed when [the respondent] was Head of State in
Chile" and in considering whether an immunity should be accorded, it was relevant to
take into account that "Mr. Pinochet became Head of State after overthrowing a
democratically elected Government by force". I accordingly accept for the purposes of
this appeal that, although no certificate has been issued by the Secretary of State
pursuant to section 21(a) of the State Immunity Act 1978, on the evidence at all relevant
times until March 1990 the respondent was Head of State of Chile.
The protection claimed by the respondent is put essentially on
two different bases, one a procedural bar to the proceedings for extradition and the other
an objection that the issues raised are not justiciable before the English Courts. They
are distinct matters, though there are common features. See for example Argentina v.
Amerado Hess 488 U.S. 428, Filartiga v. Pena-Irala (1984) 577 F.Supp. 860, Siderman
de Blake v. Republic of Argentina(1992) 965 F 2d 699, and Al Adsani v. Kuwait
107 I.L.R. 536.
The Claim of Immunity
Chronologically, it is the procedural bar which falls to be
considered first. Can the respondent say either that because the State is immune from
proceedings he cannot be brought before the Court, or can he say that as a former Head of
State he has an immunity of his own which, as I see it, is a derivative of the principle
of State immunity. The starting point for both these claims is now the State Immunity Act
1978. The long title of that Act states that this is to (a) make new provision in respect
of proceedings in the United Kingdom by or against other States and (b) to make new
provision with respect to the immunities and privileges of Heads of State.
Part I deals with (a); Part III with (b). Part I
By section 1 headed "General Immunity from
Jurisdiction", it is provided: "(1) A State is immune from the
jurisdiction of the Courts of the United Kingdom except as provided in the following
provisions of this Part of this Act".
The first part of the sentence is general and the exceptions which follow in sections 2
to 11 relate to specific matters--commercial transactions, certain contracts of employment
and injuries to persons and property caused by acts or omissions in the United
Kingdom--and do not indicate whether the general rule applies to civil or criminal
matters, or both. Some of these exceptions -patents, trademarks and business names, death
or personal injury--are capable of being construed to include both civil and criminal
proceedings.
Section 1 refers only to States and there is nothing in its
language to indicate that it covers emanations or officials of the State. I read it as
meaning States as such. Section 14, however, goes much further, since references to a
State:
- "include references to (a) the sovereign or other head of that State in his
public capacity; (b) the government of that State; and (c) any department of that
government, but not to any entity (hereinafter referred to as a separate entity) which is
distinct from the executive organs of the government of the State and capable of suing or
of being sued".
A "separate entity" is immune from jurisdiction
"if, and only if--(a) the proceedings relate to anything done by it in the exercise
of sovereign authority and (b) the circumstances are such that a State . . . would have
been so immune." This section does not deal expressly with the position of a former
Head of State.
Section 16(4), however, under the heading "Excluded
Matters", provides that "this Part of this Act does not apply to criminal
proceedings". Mr. Nicholls, Q.C. contends that this must be read subject to the terms
of the provision of Section 1(1) which confers absolute immunity from jurisdiction on
States. Section 16(4) therefore excludes criminal proceedings from the exceptions provided
in sections 2 to 11, but it does not apply to section 1(1), so that a State is immune from
criminal proceedings and accordingly Heads of State enjoy immunity from criminal
proceedings under section 14. I am not able to accept this. Section 16(4) is in quite
general terms and must be read as including section 1 as well as sections 2 to 11 of the
Act. It is hardly surprising that crimes are excluded from section 1, since the number of
crimes which may be committed by the State as opposed to by individuals seems likely to be
limited. It is also consistent with the Federal State Immunity Act of the United States
which, as I understand it, does not apply to criminal proceedings. Since extradition
proceedings in respect of criminal charges are themselves regarded as criminal
proceedings, the respondent cannot rely on Part I of the 1978 Act. |
Part III Part III of the Act contains the provisions
of this Act on which it seems that this claim turns, curiously enough under the heading,
"Miscellaneous and Supplementary". By section 20(1), "Heads of State",
it is provided that:
- "subject to the provisions of this section and to any necessary
modifications, the Diplomatic Privileges Act 1964 shall apply to (a) A sovereign or other
head of State; (b) members of his family forming part of his household; and (c) his
private servants, as it applies to the head of a diplomatic mission, to members of his
family forming part of his household and to his private servants.
. . . .
- (5) This section applies to the sovereign or other head of any State on which
immunities and privileges are conferred by Part I of this Act and is without prejudice to
the application of that Part to any such sovereign or head of State in his public
capacity".
Again there is no mention of a former Head of State.
The Diplomatic Privileges Act 1964, unlike the 1978 Act,
provides in section 1 that the provisions of the Act, "with respect to the matters
dealt with shall "have effect in substitution for any previous enactment or rule of
law". By section 2, Articles of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961)
set out in the Schedule, "shall have the force of law in the United Kingdom."
The Preamble to the Vienna Convention (which though not part of
the Schedule may in my view be looked at in the interpretation of the articles so
scheduled) refers to the fact that an International Convention on Diplomatic Privileges
and Immunities would contribute to the development of friendly relations among nations
"irrespective of the differing constitutional and social systems" and records
that the purpose of such privileges and immunities is "not to benefit individuals,
but to ensure the efficient performance of the functions of diplomatic missions as
representing States." It confirmed, however, "that the rules of customary
international law should continue to govern questions not expressly regulated by the
provisions of the present Convention."
It is clear that the provisions of the Convention were drafted
with the Head and the members of a diplomatic staff of the mission of a sending State
(whilst in the territory of the receiving State and carrying out diplomatic functions
there) in mind and the specific functions of a diplomatic mission are set out in article 3
of the Convention. Some of the provisions of the Vienna Convention thus have little or no
direct relevance to the Head of State: those which are relevant must be read "with
the necessary modifications".
The relevant provisions for present purposes are:-
(i) Article 29:
- "The person of a diplomatic agent shall be inviolable. He shall not be liable
to any form of arrest or detention. The receiving State shall treat him with due respect
and shall take all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on his person, freedom or
dignity."
(ii) By Article 31(1), a diplomatic agent shall enjoy
immunity from the criminal jurisdiction of the receiving State
(iii) By Article 39:
- "1. Every person entitled to privileges and immunities shall enjoy them from
the moment he enters the territory of the receiving State on proceedings to take up his
post or, if already in its territory, from the moment when his appointment is notified to
the Ministry for Foreign Affairs or such other ministry as may be agreed. 2. When
the functions of a person enjoying privileges and immunities have come to an end, such
privileges and immunities shall normally cease at the moment when he leaves the country,
or on expiry of a reasonable period in which to do so, but shall subsist until that time,
even in case of armed conflict. However, with respect to acts performed by such a person
in the exercise of his functions as a member of the mission, immunity shall continue to
subsist."
It is also to be noted that in article 38, for diplomatic
agents who are nationals of or resident in the receiving State, immunity is limited. Such
immunity is only in respect of "official" acts performed in the exercise of his
functions.
Reading the provisions "with the necessary
modifications" to fit the position of a Head of State, it seems to me that when
references are made to a "diplomatic agent" one can in the first place
substitute only the words "Head of State". The provisions made cover, prima
facie, a Head of State whilst in office. The next question is how to relate the time
limitation in article 39(1) to a Head of State. He does not, in order to take up his post
as Head of State, "enter the territory of a receiving State", i.e. a country
other than his own, in order to take up his functions or leave it when he finishes his
term of office. He may, of course, as Head of State visit another State on an official
visit and it is suggested that his immunity and privileges are limited to those visits.
Such an interpretation would fit into a strictly literal reading of article 39. It seems
to me, however, to be unreal and cannot have been intended. The principle functions of a
Head of State are performed in his own country and it is in respect of the exercise of
those functions that if he is to have immunity that immunity is most needed. I do not
accept therefore that section 20 of the 1978 Act read with article 39(2) of the Vienna
Convention is limited to visits abroad.
Nor do I consider that the general context of this Convention
indicates that it only grants immunity to acts done in a foreign state or in connection
only with international diplomatic activities as normally understood. The necessary
modification to "the moment he enters the territory of the receiving State on
proceeding to take up his post" and to "the moment when he leaves the
country" is to the time when he "becomes Head of State" to the time
"when he ceases to be Head of State". It therefore covers acts done by him
whilst in his own State and in post. Conversely there is nothing to indicate that this
immunity is limited to acts done within the State of which the person concerned is Head.
If these limitations on his immunity do not apply to a Head of
State they should not apply to the position of a former Head of State, whom it is sought
to sue for acts done during his period as Head of State. Another limitation has, however,
been suggested. In respect of acts performed by a person in the exercise of his functions
as head of a mission, it is said that it is only "immunity" which continues to
subsist, whereas "privileges and immunities normally cease at the moment when he
leaves the country [sc. when he finishes his term of office]." It is suggested that
all the provisions of article 29 are privileges not immunities. Mr. Nicholls, Q.C. replies
that even if being treated with respect and being protected from an attack on his person,
freedom or dignity are privileges, the provision that a diplomatic agent [sc. Head of
State] "shall not be liable to any form of arrest or detention" is an immunity.
As a matter of ordinary language and as a matter of principle it seems to me that Mr.
Nicholls is plainly right. In any event, by article 31 the diplomatic agent/Head of State
has immunity from the criminal jurisdiction of the receiving State: that immunity would
cover immunity from arrest as a first step in criminal proceedings. Immunity in article
39(2) in relation to former Heads of State in my view covers immunity from arrest, but so
also does article 29.
Where a diplomatic agent [Head of State] is in post, he enjoys
these immunities and privileges as such--i.e. ratione personae just as in respect of civil
proceedings he enjoys immunity from the jurisdiction of the Courts of the United Kingdom
under section 14 of the 1978 Act because of his office.
For one who ceases to occupy a post "with respect to acts
performed by such a person in the exercise of his functions as a member of the mission
[Head of State] immunity shall continue to subsist." This wording is in one respect
different from the wording in article 38 in respect of a diplomat who is a national of the
receiving State. In that case, he has immunity in respect of "official" acts
performed in the exercise of his function, but as Mrs. Denza suggests, the two should be
read in the same way [see Diplomatic Law, 2nd Edition, p. 363].
The question then arises as to what can constitute acts (i.e.
official acts) in the exercise of his functions as Head of State.
It is said (in addition to the argument that functions mean
only international functions which I reject):
(i) that the functions of the Head of State must be
defined by international law, they cannot be defined simply as a matter of national law or
practice; and
(ii) genocide, torture and the taking of hostages cannot
be regarded as the functions of a Head of State within the meaning of international law
when international law regards them as crimes against international law.
As to (i), I do not consider that international law prescribes
a list of those functions which are, and those which are not, functions for the purposes
of article 32. The role of a Head of State varies very much from country to country, even
as between Presidents in various States in Europe and the United States. International law
recognises those functions which are attributed to him as Head of State by the law, or in
fact, in the country of which he is Head as being functions for this purpose, subject to
any general principle of customary international law or national law, which may prevent
what is done from being regarded as a function.
As to (ii), clearly international law does not recognise that
it is one of the specific functions of a Head of State to commit torture or genocide. But
the fact that in carrying out other functions, a Head of State commits an illegal act does
not mean that he is no longer to be regarded as carrying out one of his functions. If it
did, the immunity in respect of criminal acts would be deprived of much of its content. I
do not think it right to draw a distinction for this purpose between acts whose
criminality and moral obliquity is more or less great. I accept the approach of Sir Arthur
Watts, Q.C. in his Hague Lectures at pp. 56-57:
- "A Head of State clearly can commit a crime in his personal capacity; but it
seems equally clear that he can, in the course of his public functions as Head of State,
engage in conduct which may be tainted by criminality or other forms of wrongdoing. The
critical test would seem to be whether the conduct was engaged in under colour of or in
ostensible exercise of the Head of State's public authority90. If it was, it must
be treated as official conduct, and so not a matter subject to the jurisdiction of other
States whether or not it was wrongful or illegal under the law of his own State.91"
In the present case it is accepted in the international warrant
of arrest that in relation to the repression alleged "the plans and instructions
established beforehand from the Government enabled these actions to be carried out".
"In this sense [he] Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces and Head of the Chilean
Government at the time committed punishable acts . . . "
I therefore conclude that in the present case the acts relied
on were done as part of the carrying out of his functions when he was Head of State.
The next question is, therefore, whether this immunity in
respect of functions is cut down as a matter of the interpretation of the Vienna
Convention and the Act. The provisions of the Act "fall to be considered against the
background of those principles of public international law as are generally recognised by
the family of nations" (Alcom Ltd. v. Republic of Columbia [1984] A.C. 580,
597 per Lord Diplock). So also as I see it must the Convention be interpreted.
The original concept of the immunity of a Head of State in
customary international law in part arose from the fact that he or she was a Monarch who
by reason of personal dignity and respect ought not to be impleaded in a foreign State: it
was linked no less to the idea that the Head of State was, or represented, the State and
that to sue him was tantamount to suing an independent State extra-territorially,
something which the comity of nations did not allow. Moreover, although the concepts of
State immunity and Sovereign immunity have different origins, it seems to me that the
latter is an attribute of the former and that both are essentially based on the principles
of Sovereign independence and dignity, see for example, Suchariktul in his report to the
International Law Commission (1980) Vol. II Doc. A (LN 4--331 and Add.J.) Marshall C.J. in
the Schooner Exchange v. M'Faddon (1812) 11 US (7 Cranch) 116.
In the Duke of Brunswick v. The King of Hanover (1848) 2
H.L. Cas. 1 the Duke claimed that the King of Hanover had been involved in the removal of
the Duke from his position as reigning Duke and in the maladministration of his estates.
The Lord Chancellor said:
- "A foreign Sovereign, coming into this country cannot be made responsible
here for an act done in his Sovereign character in his own country; whether it be an act
right or wrong, whether according to the constitution of that country or not, the Courts
of this country cannot sit in judgment upon an act of a Sovereign, effected by virtue of
his Sovereign authority abroad, an act not done as a British subject, but supposed to be
done in the exercise of his authority vested in him as Sovereign."
He further said:
- "If it be a matter of sovereign authority, we cannot try that fact, whether
it be right or wrong. The allegation that it is contrary to the laws of Hanover, taken in
conjunction with the allegation of the authority under which the defendant had acted, must
be conceded to be an allegation, not that it was contrary to the existing laws as
regulating the right of individuals, but that it was contrary to the laws and duties and
rights and powers of a Sovereign exercising Sovereign authority. If that be so, it does
not require another observation to shew, because it has not been doubted, that no Court in
this country can entertain questions to bring Sovereigns to account for their acts done in
their sovereign capacities abroad."
This case has been cited since both in judicial decisions and
in the writing of jurists and in Buttes Gas and Oil Co. v. Hammer [1982] A.C. 888
was said by Lord Wilberforce to be "a case in this House which is still authoritative
and which has influenced the law both here and overseas" (p. 932). In Hatch v.
Baez (1876) 7 Hun. 596, the plaintiff claimed that he had suffered injuries in the
Dominican Republic as a result of acts done by the defendant in his official capacity of
President of that Republic. The Court accepted that because the defendant was in New York,
he was within the territorial jurisdiction of the State. The Court said, however:
- "But the immunity of individuals from suits brought in foreign tribunals for
acts done within their own States, in the exercise of the sovereignty thereof, it is
essential to preserve the peace and harmony of nations, and has the sanction of the most
approved writers on international law. It is also recognised in all the judicial decisions
on the subject that have come to my knowledge . . .
- "The fact that the defendant has ceased to be president of St. Domingo does
not destroy his immunity. That springs from the capacity in which the acts were done, and
protects the individual who did them, because they emanated from a foreign and friendly
government."
|